News

ULTRA FIORD NEWS

MAY 2016

Jordi Tosas will be Technical Director of the Mountain Section for Ultra Fiord 2017

As previously announced, Ultra Fiord 2017 will introduce a series of adjustments looking to improve the runner’s experience, while still maintaining the event’s wild spirit. Among these, there will be adjustments to the calendar and race distances also, in its logistical and security structure, in the requirements to be a runner, in the control points during the race, and in the team’s leadership and personnel as well. In this sense, one of the latest updates in the confirmation that Jordi Tosas, the experienced Spanish mountaineer, will be the Technical Director of the Mountain Section for Ultra Fiord 2017. Another new feature will be the incorporation of an Ultra Fiord Training Camp, which will take place during the months of January and February….

The event creator, Stjepan Pavicic, noted that, “the incorporation of Jordi Tosas to direct the operations in the mountain section of the Cordón Chacabuco, the area which has been denominated as the Fortress, is a big step towards improving the event’s security in the most complex zone. It is the race section that includes the zones with the highest elevations along the route and the passage through the glacier section.” He further added that, “it is a great privilege to include the renowned Spanish mountaineer on the team, who will share Ultra Fiord’s spirit and fundamental values.”

About Jordi Tosas: Alpinist with vast international experience, Mountain Guide IFMGA (UIAGM), Expert in Mountain and Climbing Sports, Certified in Mountain Medicine and Rescue, and Technical Director of the Alpine School Benasque and the Himalaya Heli Ski Guides. In recent times, he has been seen closely linked to Kilian Jornet in ‘Sumits of my Life’ and in his solidary project LANGTANG as well, where together they will attempt the ascension record in classic alpinism to Everest. Additionally, he closely knows Ultra Fiord, as he participated in this year’s past edition.

For Jordi Tosas, “to be a part of this event is a great honor. Ultra Fiord is a project that motivates me, and is one that I take very seriously. It is a life experience, a special way of knowing and perceiving what is this territory. Patagonia is synonymous with humility; you go, and if she lets you, you do what you have come to do. Ultra Fiord is a race of harsh truths, with landscapes that will make it seem like you ran in an imaginary world of dreams emerged between mountains and fjords.”

Moreover, with the upcoming release of the Ultra Fiord Training Camp, which will take place in the months of January and February 2017, it is expected that more runners will be able to know the nature of the event and discover this wild territory in the months leading up to the race.

UTMB Points for Ultra Fiord 2016

Ultra Fiord 2016 is still an Ultra-Trail du Mont-Blanc® qualifying race despite the modifications to this edition’s route. The revised points awarded by the International Trail Running Association (ITRA) for the 2016 race can be found …. below according to each race distance

Distance

Points

100 Miles

5 points

100K

4 points

70K

3 points

50K

3 points

30K

0 points

APRIL 2016

ULTRA FIORD: The Next Steps

The loss of Arturo has deeply affected all of us, but we have the belief to carry on and build on his memory an emblematic and challenging race, one that will find the balance between the wild experience and the runner’s safety.

Since its origin, it has been evident that Ultra Fiord has been focused on a semi-autonomous and high-demanding race model, associated with the geography, the wild conditions, and sometimes, the inhospitable terrain of the Patagonian fjords. The event has been developing since the middle of 2014, and since its first edition, has shown its tough and authentic character, which was especially designed for mountain runners. It is a complex equation based on the fundamental values that define Ultra Fiord: love for the mountain and running in freedom.

In its second edition, the event was hit hard by very adverse meteorological conditions that forced us to active a plan for an alternative route, which strained the entire original structure planned for the race. This situation to the limit, together with other factors, made evident important weaknesses in the event’s general model, and even further, led to errors that have been a part of a deep evaluation. Considering all of these elements and seeking to improve both the experience and runner’s safety, for the next edition we will strengthen and implement the following points: …

We will create a strict rule concerning equipment, including the organization’s obligations with regards to its definition and control, both before and during the race. Furthermore, we will adjust the runner’s obligations with respect to how it should be both carried and used, incorporating drastic measurers for those that do not comply with the requirements.

We will strengthen the entire security, evacuation, and communications system, which also means strengthening the team’s personnel, especially in the high-mountain areas. In addition, we will complement this by implementing a mandatory individual insurance for helicopter rescue, which will be based in the race area.

We will strengthen the focus and criteria for the selection of experienced mountain runners. We will maintain the semi-autonomous and high-demanding race format.

We will strengthen the pre-race communication with the runner, especially with reference to the semi-autonomous format, the wild character, and isolated location, the event’s high demands, and the runner profile. Likewise, we will implement a calendar of technical pre-race talks.

In addition to the 100M, 100K, 70K, and 50K distances, we will be adding a 50K in pairs for less-experienced runners or those that would prefer to permanently run with a partner. We will also be eliminating the 30K distance in order to concentrate all of our efforts in the “ultra” distances.

We will be limiting the number of runners for each race distance.

We will modify the event calendar by distributing the different distances on different race days.

We will strengthen the attention to the runner in the aid stations, starting lines, and finish lines.

We will be improving the control of runners in the starting lines, and therefore, also the control of passage through aid stations. The timing for all distances will be electronic.

For cases of adverse meteorological conditions, we will have a pre-established plan for an alternative route. In the case that the direction of the race opts for this option, the 100M distance could be reduced or combined with the 100K distance.

In the race’s general rules, we will include an explicit article for the option that in cases of adverse meteorological conditions, the runner can freely choose not to run and save their registration fee for the following year.

We will maintain the event’s wild spirit intact. Ultra Fiord will continue being an authentic and unique race, with the stamp of the fjords, located in a remote, isolated, and sometimes hostile place, built for mountain runners. To be an Ultra Fiord runner will continue being a challenge, one that implies entering deeply into the Patagonia, accepting its geography, its isolation, its climate, and its demanding and semi-autonomous race format. If this is what you are looking for, we invite you to continue developing Ultra Fiord’s history!